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EnterpriseDB releases PostgreSQL distribution

EnterpriseDB has released a new distribution of the PostgreSQL open source database, hoping to expand the use of the software and compete better with MySQL AB.

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The distribution, called EnterpriseDB Postgres, bundles the most recent version of PostgreSQL with 12 of the most widely used add-ons for the software, including tools for cryptography, security, full-text searching and replication.

By offering all the software in a single file that's easy to install, along with a new community Web site for developers, EnterpriseDB hopes to attract new users to the open source database, said Derek Rodner, the company's director of product strategy.

EnterpriseDB's own product, EnterpriseDB Advanced Server, is built on top of PostgreSQL but is not open source. The company sells its software with add-ons it has developed to provide compatibility with Oracle's database. Those add-ons are proprietary and not part of the new distribution.

Expanding the user community around PostgreSQL could help EnterpriseDB to gain more customers for its own product, which so far has about 125 customers. Just last month it announced that Ticketline in the U.K. had switched from PostgreSQL to its EnterpriseDB Advanced Server.

"What we're trying to do is ride the tide of PostgreSQL. It has been around for more than a decade, and it's considered to be a rock-solid database that's ready for mission-critical OLTP applications, but in some senses it has suffered because it doesn't have a company behind it like you have with MySQL," Rodner said, referring to the open source database market leader.

One question now is whether the PostgreSQL community will embrace the new distribution. EnterpriseDB managed to upset some PostgreSQL supporters last month when it suggested in a news release that its own software was superior to the open source product on which it is based. Joshua Drake, who works for the PostgreSQL support company Command Prompt, called the suggestion "cow dung."

But Magnus Hagander, a member of the Swedish chapter of the PostgreSQL community, said on Tuesday that he thinks the distribution will be well received.

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The IDG News Service is a Network World affiliate.

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